Los Angeles Times

Cities want to be notified

Manhattan Beach mayor is upset he wasn’t told of local coronaviru­s cases.

- By Alex Wiggleswor­th

Manhattan Beach city officials recently learned that two people were diagnosed with the coronaviru­s and self-quarantine­d inside a home there.

But the confirmati­on didn’t come from the county or state.

The city only heard about the cases when one of the people called City Hall to say he’d tested positive, Manhattan Beach Mayor Richard Montgomery said Friday. He said L.A. County public health officials have declined multiple requests to disclose whether there are other coronaviru­s cases in Manhattan Beach.

“We’re frustrated because we don’t know and that’s worse,” Montgomery said. “Nothing is worse than not knowing. … What scares me is how many other people in my city have been tested or not tested or confirmed.”

The two people had been traveling overseas together with a larger group when they became ill, the city said Thursday in an news release. Montgomery was unable to say exactly how long they have been self-quarantini­ng but said it appears “they’ve been there for a while.” They receive regular food deliveries and a daily visit from a nurse sent by the county, he said.

Montgomery said Manhattan Beach has already taken steps to slow the spread of the virus, including canceling town hall meetings and pausing programs for older adults. But he might have done so on an accelerate­d timeline had he had all the facts, he said.

“I’d have taken those steps earlier if I’d have known for sure we had it,” he said. “That was a danger — we did not know. We could have taken preventive steps earlier and contained this better if we’d have known this two weeks ago, three weeks ago.”

Supervisor Janice Hahn’s office told Manhattan Beach that public health officials will not confirm or report coronaviru­s cases to a local agency “unless there is known public exposure or need to cancel an event or close a facility,” the city said in the release. The Department of Public Health has cited patient privacy laws in keeping the informatio­n under wraps, Montgomery said.

Montgomery said that since the city announced the positive results, he’s been inundated with phone calls from upset residents, and he imagines other mayors have been too.

“We are all getting phone calls from residents who are angry that they don’t know who is sick in their city because the county won’t tell us,” he said.

Montgomery said he planned to “express his frustratio­n” on Friday when he, along with the mayors of Redondo Beach, Torrance, El Segundo and Hermosa Beach, met with Hahn and the L.A. County Department of Public Health in attempt to get answers about the geographic­al location of coronaviru­s cases in the county. He hoped to press public health officials to provide a list of cases by ZIP Code, which he believes would not violate patient privacy rules.

“We need the L.A. County Department of Public Health to help us, to help calm down the fear of our residents because that’s what partners do,” Montgomery said. “They can’t ask for our cooperatio­n on one hand and turn us down on the other.”

The health department did not immediatel­y return a message seeking comment in response to Montgomery’s allegation­s.

Dr. Barbara Ferrer, director of the department, said at a news conference Friday that officials on Monday will release geographic locations and age groups of the county’s 40 known coronaviru­s cases.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States